Wolf Dreams

Entries tagged as ‘magic’

Green Doors and Red Dragons – Epilogue

December 21, 2007 · 4 Comments

 Well, Thomas was as good as his word, and had me into a new house before Christmas. Barely before, but he did make it on Christmas Eve. The house itself was…ummm…a bit unusual, to say the least. I should have known that Thomas would do something strange.

On the morning of Christmas Eve, Cosmo and I arrived at a secondary portal Door (this one was keyed to only a few places and quite safe compared to the one I used to guard, which went anywhere.) I had really enjoyed my stay with the dragons, but I was ready to come back to my world with familiar sights and furniture my size.

Thomas whisked us off in a car, and by evening we were driving down dark country roads with snowy trees on either side of us. There were few other cars and Cosmo was allowed to peer out of the windows, which he did enthusiastically. With my new ability to understand some dragon, I enjoyed listening to his running commentary on what he saw. Since he saw better in the dark than humans, he was noticing all sorts of wildlife in the woods. He really wanted to get out and play in the snow, too.

Finally, the car turned into a pair of gates lit with Christmas lights and started down what seemed to be a driveway.

“Thomas, where on earth are you taking us?” I asked.

“You’ll see. It’s easier to show you than to explain,” he replied.

I wasn’t so sure I liked the sound of this, but he wouldn’t say anything else, so I didn’t have any choice except to wait.

About ten minutes later, we rounded one last curve and there was an enormous stone structure in front of us. Even in the dark, it clearly needed extensive repairs, but it was festively lit with Christmas lights, and a Christmas tree glowed in a front window. But what really told me that I was home was the front door. Or should I say, the front Door.

Because the Door it was, resurrected from being ripped loose from its anchoring magic and split into four separate Doors.

“Thomas, you didn’t? I thought you were going to leave it split because it’s so dangerous to have it functioning? I mean, that’s why I was guarding it in the first place, right? Thomas?”

He wasn’t answering me. He was rubbing his face and looking embarrassed, but he wasn’t answering.

Thomas?!”

“I know. I shouldn’t have. But I’m sure I can figure out how to put protections on it, something to keep the bad things out…”

I growled. Cosmo giggled and imitated me.

Thomas continued. “You’re going to be out here anyway with Cosmo, so you might as well guard the door at the same time. I did fix it so that it can’t be hijacked like it was when Giganto kidnapped you two…” he trailed off.

“I’m glad to know that you realize what sort of danger that thing put us in, Thomas.”

He was wiggling uncomfortably behind the steering wheel now.

“I’ve arranged to have some, ummm…guards to live there with you. As you can see, the property is quite large, and when we’ve finished renovating, there will be plenty of space for visitors and guards and helpers…” he trailed off again. I think he knew he was digging himself in deeper and deeper.

“So now I’m expected to run a bed and breakfast for visitors from elsewhere? And take care of guards? I’m fine with being Cosmo’s foster mother. I couldn’t leave him now. But the rest of it? Thomas, what exactly is going on here?”
He sighed and unlocked the car doors. “Come on in. It’ll be easier to explain inside.”

I sighed and slipped a harness on Cosmo. He had a tendency to zoom off on his own, and I wanted him to stay close tonight. Then I followed Thomas out of the car and we crunched through the crusted snow to a side door. We couldn’t use the front Door, of course; it only opened magically to other worlds.

“This was originally a manor house in Europe,” said Thomas.

“You mean it was designed like a European manor house?” I asked.

“No. I mean that some industrial tycoon about a hundred years ago with more money than sense and a desire to feel like an aristocrat actually had the thing taken down stone by stone, shipped here, and reassembled. Not long after that he went broke, and shortly after that he died. His heirs were unable to dispose of the property. It seems no one wanted a large, drafty mausoleum like this when they could build new, comfortable homes. It has been for sale and falling down ever since.”

“Well, I think I can see why he went broke, if bringing this place over here was his idea of a good decision on how to spend his money!”

“Indeed,” said Thomas as he opened a gate to a small walled garden. This part had been fixed up a little bit – the walls were whole, and the door we were heading for was new.

Thomas opened the door into a huge old-fashioned kitchen. There was a fire glowing in an enormous hearth with an inglenook and bread ovens, a huge wooden work table, and a sink with a pump. The walls had been whitewashed at some point because a few flakes remained and the floor was stone.

“Thomas, this is ridiculous. If you think I’m going to live like they did way back whenever, you’ve got another think coming!”

He turned and grinned at me, and walked across the room to open another door. He bowed slightly and waved Cosmo and me through it. “Your apartments, m’dame.”

I stepped through and looked around suspiciously. Shining wood floors, comfortable furniture much like the stuff that the red dragons had incinerated, a small fireplace, filled book shelves, even a Christmas tree twinkling in the corner….I went into the next room. It held a big comfortable bed, dresser, and old-fashioned wardrobe. Next was clearly a room for Cosmo. I continued. A modern kitchen and dining area, a bath that was positively luxurious, and a work room with loom and spinning wheel and sewing machine and lots of shelves and drawers. I couldn’t see out of the windows in the dark, but I imagined that the view would be a good one. “All right, Thomas, this is good. In fact, it’s very good. Now then, what about the rest of this place?”

“You won’t need to do much. The Door is just through here, and there is an alarm on it, so you know if anyone is trying to use it. The others who will be living here will take care of themselves and help you with both Cosmo and the Door.” He opened another door in my new living room and we stepped through into the front hall. The Door was there, green and beautiful again with its magic restored. We went through an archway into the room that held the Christmas tree I had seen shining in the front window.

It was huge, almost brushing the high ceilings, and beautifully decorated. The tree had packaged piled under it, all sizes and shapes, and fir garlands hung all around the room. Candles twinkled on the mantle. This room had been restored to look like it had long ago, with flagged floors, lovely rugs and drapes and elegant furniture. It was a little too large and echoing to be comfortable for me, though.

“Thomas, this is beautiful.” I turned to face him. “Now who else will be living here?”

“I will, for one!” A familiar voice came from behind me.

I turned, and there stood Felix! “Felix?”

“I wish to make a study of your culture, and you need to continue your studies of the dragon language if you are to be a fit guardian for the little one,” he replied, clapping me painfully on the back. “I told you that the little token I gave you meant we would meet again!”

I reached into my pocket and felt the gift he had given me the last time I had seen him.

“Felix, I’m so glad you’re here!” I told him. And I was.

Thomas broke in. “Cosmo’s relative also want to be able to come and visit him. This place is large and isolated enough – and fire-resistant enough in many areas – to make a good place to house them. I know I didn’t ask you, but since you enjoyed your visit with the dragons so much I thought perhaps you wouldn’t mind?” He looked so hopeful and so afraid that I would be angry with him.

“Thomas….well done.” I told him, and he heaved a huge sigh of relief.

Others came into the room now. My good friends Jon and Rob, my dear neighbor Florence (with both cats, Isadore and Eleanora, who were winding through her legs), quite a few dragons – red, yellow, blue and green – and some humans that I didn’t know all came in. Someone brought in trays of food and drinks, music started playing, and all of a sudden, there was a party.

At midnight some friend of Thomas’s that bore a striking resemblance to Santa Claus showed up and distributed gifts to everyone there. Cosmo got dragon toys, I got yarn and knitting things and some books on dragon, the cats got catnip mice…there was something appropriate for everyone.

When the party finally broke up in the wee small hours of the morning, I retired with Cosmo to my new rooms. Rob and Jon came with me, and after I got Cosmo settled for the night we sat down for a chance to catch up. Rob was staying for a few days’ vacation, but Jon was going to be here indefinitely, working on the renovations and setting up a computer network. I had been delighted to hear this.

“So you’re an otherworld traveler now, are you?” Jon smiled and punched me on the shoulder.

“Getting kidnapped by dragons wasn’t exactly the plan I had for visiting other worlds, Jon,” I replied.

“Yes, but it worked!” he chuckled. “But you know, I think I’ll just ask Thomas to take me along sometime. It sounds a little less dramatic, I know, and you do like to make an entrance and an exit…”

Rob was laughing so hard by now that he could hardly catch his breath. “Be careful Jon,” he wheezed. “She may have learned something from those dragons about causing pain!”

I just shook my head.  I settled contentedly into my new couch in front of the crackling fire and watched the lights on my Christmas tree while Jon and Rob tried to outdo each other teasing me, and let it all roll over me. It was really, really good to be home.

- She Wolf © 2007

Categories: Stand Alone Fiction · Wolf Dreams
Tagged: , , ,

Green Doors and Red Dragons Part 6

November 19, 2007 · 5 Comments

 I had fallen from a good ten or twelve feet up, but fortunately the pool was deep enough to break the fall. The water was icy cold, though, and the blue dragon standing there sent a further chill through my veins. I got my feet under me and then ducked back under the water to escape the blast of fiery breath that I was sure was coming my way any second. I scuttled under the water to the wall, where I clung, terrified. I was still holding my breath desperately, close to blacking out and waiting to be boiled alive when something grabbed me and hauled me to the surface where I hung, gasping for breath. The dragon had me dangling from oneof his strong arms, dripping streams of water.  A series of whistles came from him, and when I just looked at him, still gasping, he switched to a strange lilting speech. When I didn’t respond to this, he stared at me, head cocked to the side in what was apparently a universal gesture of puzzlement.

A flash of red distracted us both, and Cosmo shot onto the scene from a niche in the wall. He landed at the feet of the blue dragon and squeaked somthing to him in dragon. The dragon looked back at me and said in perfectly good English, “So that’s the language, then! You know, if you are not an aquatic species, and apparently, despite your lack of fur, you are not, you will eventually expire if you remain under the water without access to air.”

I nodded at this obvious statement, coughing a little. I wasn’t capable of doing anything else at the moment, and figured I’d be toasted any time now. He turned his head away slightly and held me at a greater distance. “I have not studied your culture a great deal, so forgive me if I am being offensive, but to my slightly more sensitive nostrils, you are offensive. Your lack of hygiene has created a fearful odor. I am going to put you back in the water for now.” He dropped me back into the water with a splash, where I huddled with chattering teeth. The only part of me that wasn’t cold was my burnt arm. It felt good in the chilly waters. Cosmo squeaked something else at the dragon.

“Oh – I didn’t realize how limited your range of tolerated temperatures is.” He said something back to Cosmo in dragon, and pulled me out of the water again. “Don’t move,” he told me. I couldn’t – I was frozen with fear and cold.

Cosmo trundled over to a strange looking tube that led to the bottom of the pool and breathed fire into it. He repeated this process as the blue dragon poked around in a corner. Looking around the room, I realized that the pool I had landed in was not a natural one. It was tiled and set into the floor of a room that had ornate walls, polished floors, and a large central hearth. The walls and floor were eroded and crumbling in places, like the room I had been in before, but on the whole it was in fairly good condition.

The dragon returned and put me back in the water which was lukewarm now thanks to Cosmo’s breath and that strange tube, and handed me a large crock of something goopy. I took it with both hands.

“Please cleanse yourself and your clothing. Hand me the cleansed clothing and I will have the small one dry it. When your hygiene is acceptable, we will talk.”

All righty then. I was at a loss for words. Running from certain death, I had literally fallen into a room with a draconic neat freak – the Felix Unger of dragons. This had to be a dream. I did as I was told.

While I was making sure I measured up to his – and my – cleanliness standards, the blue dragon had Cosmo start a fire in the hearth, hung my clothing up and made sure that Cosmo just warmed it dry and didn’t incinerate it, and bustled around doing various things.

Just as I was beginning to feel like a prune, he came back over, lifted me out gently, inspected me, and said, “You’ll do now. Your clothing is dry and also adequately cleaned. Please take this,” and he handed me another huge crock with something goopy in it, “and place it upon your burns and other injuries. They are beginning to look infected- no doubt due to the state of filth you were in.” This stuff smelled medicinal, and I slathered it on liberally.

As I did, I said, “Thank you. I assure you that I didn’t like the way I smelled – or felt- any more than you did. However, I have not been in a position to bathe or change my clothing for several days, through no choice of my own.”

“I am glad to hear that. I wish to study your species further one day, and the odor alone would make it difficult for me to do so. I am a bit particular about these things, but then a scholar needs to be careful. Contamination of a site or relics is not good.” He paused for breath, but only barely, and began to talk again, “I am thinking you must be the foster mother that the little one has been so concerned about. He neglected to tell me that you weren’t a dragon when he told me you both had been kidnapped by the red dragons who have taken over here.”

I nodded and he continued, “Please come and have something to eat. I am sorry I have no cave lizard to offer, but it is not a favorite of mine. The little one here has been most insistent that he take it to you for every meal. However, I had barely touched my supplies when I was forced to take refuge in here, so I do have some variety of foodstuffs to choose from. I hope you find the meal palatable.”

I told him that it was quite all right. I liked a little more variety in my diet than straight cave lizard.

“Yes, I suspected as much. But it is the small one’s favorite, apparently, and a bit of a treat, so he made sure to get you some every day, even if he had to hunt it himself.”

I got the idea that it was like a three year old insisting on serving ice cream for every meal if he was given a chance. When I got the idea across to the blue dragon, he hissed a dragon laugh and said, “Yes, that would be accurate.”

As we ate, he told me how he came to be here. “I am trapped as surely as you are. I was here in this remote, long abandoned place doing some research into the living habits of our ancestors when this group of hostile red dragons arrived. I managed to hide in here – this is the old nursery complex – and block off the doors so they wouldn’t find me. This wing was set a bit out of the way, anyhow, for the protection of the young. This room by itself is quite a find – an  intact bathing room with the smaller pools for the young, and a bas-relief of aquatic species on the walls…” he was sidetracked, rhapsodizing now about the significance of his find. I watched him going on and on and had to shake my head. I could almost envision a pocket protector bursting with pens and pencils on his chest and horn-rimmed glasses with tape on them perched on the shiny blue scales of his nose.

Finally he came back to the original subject. “I doubt if they will find us here. They are far more interested in the old military portions of the citadel.”

“Citadel?” I asked.

“Yes. In ancient times, this was the seat of the red dragons’ power. There are massive caves for the rulers and warriors and huge areas devoted to the needs of their day to day living and training as well as the more mundane areas for regular dragons. This group would have needed to come here once they began to use the enlargement spells, no doubt. Nothing else would hold them as they grew too large for regular residences.”

“Enlargement spells?” I was starting to remind myself of a parrot.

“Yes – surely you didn’t think that all dragons were as large as their leader, did you? Oh – I can see that you did! No, no, not at all. This young one is the correct size for a young dragon in the first stage of life. The ones that are being trained are scarcely older than he is – a little, but not much. They have begun to have enlargement spells placed upon them already to make them better warriors. This is not good. Not for them, or for anyone else. The use of enlargement spells has been banned by the inter-dragon council for centuries now. And the big dragon, their leader? He is easily ten times larger than any dragon his age has a right to be! Disgraceful!” He grunted angrily. “Granted, dragons continue to grow all throughout their lives, but I have only known one dragon even half his size and she was an ancient almost at the end of her life!”

The blue dragon was clearly upset by all of this, and I saw whisps start to curl out of his nostrils. I edged away a little, ready to duck and cover. He snorted and then angrily turned his head and blasted the pool behind us. To my drop-jawed surprise, fire did not come out and vaporize the pool. Instead, it was now covered by a sheet of ice!

Cosmo squeaked with delight and hurled himself onto the slick surface, spinning and sliding around on his round little belly.

“Ice?” I asked.

“Well, of course, I am not a red or yellow dragon! I am a blue dragon, and we tend to live in or around water. Fire is not very useful there, I assure you. However, the ability to turn your foe into an ice sculpture is. Green dragons also carry this adaptation – they tend to live in heavily forested areas and who wants to burn down their home? No, red dragons who like the rocky tops of mountains and yellow dragons who prefer deserts are the fire breathers.  Ice isn’t nearly as impressive, I’m afraid, as a wall of fire, but that’s the way things are. We have always concentrated on magic and scholarship anyway.”

We finished eating a rather tasty meal – which at this point would probably have been just about anything other than cave lizard – and Cosmo crawled into my lap for a cuddle.

“The young one – Cosmo as you call him- seems to have bonded with you quite well despite the language barrier. Little ones need affection, and you are doing well with him.”

“Giganto out there didn’t seem to think so. He said something about me coddling him and needing to toughen him up!”

“Giganto, as you call him, is a – what was that word? Oh – a sociopath. He is abusing the young dragons that have been given into his care by like minded individuals. He is attempting to make them viscious sociopaths like himself. Then he intends to make an army out of them. He may succeed or not, but those young dragons are learning nothing but cruelty from him. Your bond with Cosmo here is far more natural and normal for a young dragon.”

The blue dragon paused for a moment. “I wish I knew how to stop him. He is attempting to return our world to a way that we abandoned long ago for a more peaceful way. He has some support, clearly, but I think that the world at large has no idea just what he is up to, and the lengths he is willing to go to, to achieve his dreams.

“Or maybe they do – that would explain why Cosmo has been fostered with you, in your world. Fostering young dragons with other sorts of dragons is quite common, and has been used for a long time to promote peace and understanding among members of our species. I think the little one’s parents were not only attempting to find him a safe place to grow, but also to broaden our perspectives and peace still more just as Giganto out there attempts to narrow these things. Unfortunately, his method is quicker and far more dangerous.”

We sat in silence for a few minutes and then he spoke again, “I wish I could get word back to my people. There is undoubtedly some way to stop him, but we have to let the inter-draconic council know. And we are well and thoroughly trapped here. I wish I had spent more time on my scrying spells….” He shrugged, an oddly human gesture. “No help for it now.”

I sat up straighter. “Maybe there is a way. It will be dangerous, but…” I outlined what had happened with the Door, and recounted seeing the startled blue dragon on the other side of it.

“An interdiminsional portal! And it was ripped from its anchor? And it still functions? Astounding!”

I explained what Giganto had said about using the dragon carvings on the Door to bypass the protective seals. The blue dragon looked at me thoughtfully. “Based on this, I would say that your Door has fractured magically into four Doors and each will lead to one of the groups of dragons. It has probably rendered the Door useless for any purpose other than to access another of the fractured portions of the Door, but if we can reach the thing, I think we can easily make use of this! Wonderful!”

He began talking to himself in dragon and Cosmo cuddled deeper into my lap. I fell asleep, warm and clean and well fed for the first time in days, to the gentle rumbling of his voice.

-She Wolf © 2007

Categories: Stand Alone Fiction · Wolf Dreams
Tagged: , , ,

Green Doors and Red Dragons – Part 1

November 2, 2007 · 9 Comments

 ”Drop it! I said, DROP IT!” I yelled at the top of my lungs, lunging after what used to be a perfectly good book. I love books. I don’t like to see them destroyed. “Cosmo, drop it. Now.”

Cosmo gave the book another shake and then dropped it. Or should I say, dropped the remains of it. I sighed, picked up the bits, and put them in the trash can to join the spoiled socks (some of my good wool ones), the tattered bits of my best jeans, and a few other random items that had become toys today.

I would have thought that enduring the puppyhood and adolescence of several generations of Labrador retrievers would have prepared me for anything. But nothing, nothing, had prepared me for this.

Labs chew things, they eat things (anything and everything), they puddle (create lakes) on things, they knock things (furniture) over or tail whip things off of flat surfaces and onto the floor, frequently resulting in small pieces of things. They drool on things and shake them to bits. But they do not singe things. Nor do they out and out burn them to a crisp. They cannot take wing and fly away with the object of their desires, or fly up and take it down from the top of the fridge where you thought you put it for safekeeping. In retrospect, Labs are easy.

Cosmo was a whole new level of challenge. But then, Cosmo was a baby dragon.

A dragon? Now that’s pretty unlikely, most folks would say, and they’d be right. A bright red, 45 pound baby dragon is just about as unlikely as a bright green door that leads to other dimensions and realities. But the bright green door that leads elsewhere but not to the front yard is the front door to my house. It is just about as unlikely as my landlord/ employer, Thomas the Guardian, who pops in and out of those other dimensions like I pop in and out of the supermarket, and who, incidentally, was responsible for my baby-sitting (dragon-sitting?) of Cosmo.

He told me it would just be for a little while, and like an idiot, I believed him. I keep forgetting that a little while for an ancient wizard from another dimension is not the same thing that it is for me.

Anyway, he dropped by with Cosmo several months ago and I hadn’t seen him since. He hadn’t forgotten us -he sent regular shipments of baby dragon chow (I refused to think what it might really be, so I called it dragon chow), but didn’t respond to any of my attempts to contact him. In fact, he hadn’t disappeared this thoroughly in the last several years, ever since he reappeared after his recuperation from a little fix the he had gotten into with The Door. We – my buddies Jon and Rob and I – had rescued him from his little problem, and he limped off for a year that time. I shuddered to think about a year with Cosmo.

Don’t get me wrong. Cosmo was sweet and loving and according to my employer he was far more intelligent than a Labrador retriever, behavior aside. Right now he was in the toddler stage of dragons. He was a lot like a two-year-old – with wings, scales, fiery breath and an attitude. Thomas told me that if I treated him like a combination of a puppy, a chimpanzee and a toddler human I’d probably be on the right track. Then he muttered something about it being a kinder treatment than he would get from other dragons, but he wouldn’t elaborate. He just patted me on the back, fireproofed most of the house by some means I didn’t understand, and left precipitously.

That was several months ago, and I hadn’t seen him since. In the meantime, Cosmo and I learned to get along. Sort of. I invested in several new fire extinguishers, lots of toddler toys and doggy chew toys. He learned to understand enough basic human speech to know – most of the time -what I wanted him to stop doing, and to understand that I really wanted him to use his oversized litter box regularly. This was good, because speaking dragon was beyond the abilities of my vocal cords.

Isadore, the cat I had inherited from Thomas along with the guardianship of the door, voluntarily moved next door to live with Jon for the duration. He objected to being a potential dragon toy.

Florence, my elderly neighbor who used to come over and play guardian of the door for me once in a while so I could get out, drew the line at dragon sitting. So I had been stuck in the house with my little monster for the last few months except on the rare occasion that I could talk Jon or Rob into helping me out.

I peered out the window. It was dark out now and no one would be able to see us, so I put a leash around Cosmo’s bright red scaly neck and we went out into the back yard for a while. The leash was a long one, and while Cosmo entertained himself chasing fireflies around the yard, I sat in a lawn chair with the end of the leash wrapped around my wrist and tried to recover from another long day. Florence’s cat stuck her head through the hedge and Cosmo flitted over to see her. She was far more patient than her litter-mate Isadore and aside from one unfortunate incident when Cosmo got a little too excited near Eleanora’s tail, they had gotten along well. The singed fur had grown back and the scratches on Cosmo’s soft face scales had healed and they were soon friends again.

Tonight they were companionably stalking something through the late autumn flower beds when Eleanora suddenly hissed and fluffed her tail, speeding back to her side of the fence and disappearing in record time.
“Okay, what did you do to Eleanora this time, Cosmo?” I said, reeling in the leash and walking over to him. But Cosmo was acting strange, too, cringing and trying to hide under the bushes. “Boy, what did you guys do to each other?” I corrected myself. I pulled him out from under the bushes, picked him up, and we went inside again. I checked Cosmo over, but I couldn’t find any scratch marks. Then I called Florence to check on Eleanora. She said that Eleanora had jetted through the cat flap as if demons were chasing her and hidden in the basement, but she seemed to be all right.

Sighing and shaking my head, I tucked Cosmo into his flame resistant bed for the night and sat down for a little bit of much-needed peace and quiet with my knitting. It didn’t last. Cosmo was out again and insisted on crawling into my lap. He was heavy and very hot, but he was clearly distressed about something, so I let him stay, draping my knitting over his back, and we watched TV together until he finally fell asleep.

Cosmo was quiet all day. His appetite was fine, so I decided that he was either tired from his late night or the colder weather which had moved in overnight was bothering him. He didn’t want to go out after dark and lay down on the tiles in front of my fireplace. I started a fire for him, and he huddled close to it. We watched the flames in silence.

The next day he was still quiet. He wouldn’t go near any of the windows either. Usually he spent at least part of the day staring out of the ones he was allowed look through (the back ones where he wouldn’t be seen by passers-by). Avoiding the windows was definitely not normal for Cosmo, and I wished once more that I could get in touch with Thomas. On the other hand, Eleanora and Isadore were acting the same way according to Florence and Jon. Of course that didn’t make it any less strange; it merely multiplied the strangeness. I was even starting to feel uncomfortable, like I was being watched. This was silly, with all the safeguards Thomas had put on the house against snooping when he made me the guardian of the door. No ordinary human could get near the house unless they were invited. It would have to be something really powerful and magical to get through those wards. Since our world isn’t very magical and I was sitting on one of the few portals from magical places and it was sealed for the time being, I assumed this wasn’t very likely. You know what they say about assumptions.

That evening when Cosmo and I were in the kitchen, the earth started to move. I had been in a few earthquakes and this felt like a big one. As I ran past the kitchen window on my way to grab Cosmo and get outside, I saw the ground in the back yard erupting and realized that this earthquake was very localized –  literally right in my own back yard. I watched with horror as a huge hole was opened up. Then I really ran. Cosmo and I tripped over each other in our hurry to get out of the kitchen and to the living room on the far side of the house. As we lay tangled on the kitchen floor, something blocked out the moonlight which had been coming in through the kitchen window.

Shining in the middle of that something was a large eye, surrounded by bright red scales.

-She Wolf (c)2007

Categories: Stand Alone Fiction · Wolf Dreams
Tagged: , , ,

Beyond the Mountains

June 26, 2007 · 1 Comment

 Once upon a time, a family lived at the far side of a deep forest, up against a range of tall mountains. The mountains rose right up out of the forest, looking like a giant had dropped a bag of rocks right in the middle of the trees. They were made of stone so white it looked like snow. No hills led up to them, and they were so steep and rocky that nothing grew on them and even the doughtiest climbers were defeated by them.  They extended for miles and miles, only stopping a few miles from the seashore on either end of the land. They were like a great wall dividing the land in half. Their jagged tops were always covered in snow, so high were they, and a few were so tall that the clouds almost always covered them.

People told all sorts of tales about these mountains. Some people said that in the middle of the range was a magic land where all sorts of mythical creatures lived, and other said that there was an entrance to the underworld there. Some said that there was secret passageway to the far side hidden somewhere, and others said that there were giant birds that lived there that would give you a ride to the other side if you could catch one. Of course, you had to get into the mountains to catch one first, so no one had ever done this. There were tales, too, of terrible monsters that lived there that could walk through rocks and climb sheer rock faces that would sometimes come out of the mountains and wreak havoc in the lands beside the mountains.

The family that lived there, in the shadow of the mountains, didn’t say much about them. They kept a eye on the mountains, but never saw anything strange or magical or frightening come out of them They just stuck to making a living, picking up the bits of rock that fell from the mountains that were of a good size to make rock walls and houses, carving them into usable shapes, and transporting them to a town on the far side of the forest where there weren’t any rocks for building so that people were willing to pay good money for them.

This family had lived there for many generations, gathering rocks and selling them, and nothing had ever happened to any of them. They rarely told the stories about the mountains around their fire at night – they saw no point to it, as they could see for themselves that the mountains were just that -plain, boring oversized hunks of rock. As a result, the children never heard the stories unless they happened to go to the town on the far side of the forest with their parents.

When the little daughter of the family was five or so, she went along with her father on her first trip to town. The trip was long, for it took several days to get to the far side of the forest, and so she had never been before. She was astounded by all the people and the sights in town, and in the inn that night, she heard her first storyteller, and she was mesmerized. The storyteller was as good one, with many new and wonderful tales to tell, several of which were about the mountains at the back of the family’s home at the far side of the forest. The little girl listened, her mouth wide open as she hung on to every word. When her father came to take her to bed, she cried until he had to threaten her with no more trips to town if she kept it up. After he tucked her into bed, she dreamed dreams of the magic in the storyteller’s tales, magic on the other side of the mountain walls.

For years, while she was growing up, each time it was her turn to accompany her father or mother into town to sell the rocks, she would seek out the storyteller. She learned to ask for tales of the mountains and hung on each word the storyteller said. Her parents joked that she wasn’t expensive to take to town, as she never wanted to go into the shops, and they always knew where to find her.

The little daughter did not just listen to the stories, she believed them. Well, not all of them. There were some that were too far- fetched even for her to believe. But many of them seemed like they must be true, with magic laced through them and wonder filling them.  At home, she  began to creep off to search along the rock walls for a hidden entrance or some sign that the magic might be true. She was very careful not to let her family know what she was doing, for she was afraid they would make fun of her or even forbid her to explore. She kept her quest silent, all through the years of growing up.

By the time the daughter had reached the age of 17 or so, she began to look less often. Real life was taking up more and more of her time, and a young man from a house half way through the forest had begun to court her. She hadn’t looked for magic or ways into the mountains in quite some time, really.

One fine spring day, she was out with one of the pony cart, looking for nice rocks of a certain size and maybe a few spring greens for dinner if she could find some. She was humming a little tune she had heard on her last trip to town, not thinking of anything in particular and picking up rocks from an exceptionally nice and very recent rock fall she had come across.

As she pulled another rock from pile, she felt a slight breeze on her face. It came from the direction of the side of the mountain. Startled, she pulled back away from the rock face. As she pulled, the rock she was holding on to suddenly came with her and the rest of the pile shifted, revealing a small dark hole in the side of the rock face. A steady fresh breeze was blowing out of the hole. She sat there in shock with the rock on her lap, staring at the hole that no one had ever though could exist – a hole that quite clearly led to Somewhere Else.

Finally, she got her wits about her and, putting the rock aside, scrambled to her feet. She looked carefully at the hole. The fresh air was definitely coming from it. It was black as pitch inside, and she could see nothing. Carefully trying to avoid causing another slide that would hurt her and bury the hole once more, she set about moving rocks to make the hole larger. When the rocks had come down off the higher part of the mountain, they seemed to have crashed against this section of the mountain with enough force to break through a weak section of the wall, revealing this cave behind it. It didn’t take long to make the opening large enough to let in a little light and then to look inside. The cave floor appeared to be clear of rubble. This was good, for it meant that the cave wasn’t in the habit of collapsing. She could see a small chamber and a passage leading down and deeper into the mountain.

She was beside herself with excitement. This was what she had looked for all those years. The cave had to lead to somewhere, or there wouldn’t be a fresh breeze blowing from it.

She hurried to the pony cart and grabbed a candle stub out of a basket kept there. Then she paused and grabbed the basket itself. It was full of supplies for family members caught away from the house at night, with a blanket, package of waterproof matches, a small skin of water, and some journey cake and dried fruit. There was also a small length of rope in the basket, which was the sort designed to be worn on a person’s back. She though she would just go a little ways into the cave and see what it was like. She had to be home in a few hours, and didn’t want to worry anyone at home by being late. She wouldn’t do anything dangerous, she thought. She just wanted to have a little look at this cave she had been searching for since she was small.

When she entered the caves, the young woman lit her little candle and held it out as she looked around the room. The chamber was coated with a shiny, slippery looking stone which glistened in the light from her candle. The floor was rough in places, but fairly even as she walked across it. She touched the wall and was surprised to find it damp. Slowly she walked into the passageway and the next chamber.

While the cave may not have contained magic, it certainly contained wonders. There were rooms full of huge spears of stone hanging from the ceiling, and others rising up from the floor. Some rooms had crystal clear pools with ice-white eyeless fish swimming in them and others had strange looking walls covered with stony popcorn and rocky draperies. The colors varied, too, from the basic snowy white to rusty colors and greens and even blues. One room looked like a sunset as the colors shaded from top to bottom. She lost all track of time, exploring in those caves. A real sunset shaded the sky and it grew dark outside. Eventually, her pony grew hungry for his dinner, pulled his rope loose from the branch he was tethered to and took himself and his cart home to eat. When he arrived without his young mistress, the house went into an uproar. The young daughter was always home on time. They could only imagine that something terrible had occurred to her. Her brothers came boiling out of the house like upset bees, her sisters ran to get their own ponies from the stable, and the young man who was courting her ran out bellowing her name in a panic. Her parents grabbed whoever they could long enough to try to organize a search.

Blissfully unaware that she was causing a panic, Annalise (for that was her name) was staring at each new cavern full of wonders. The breeze was stronger now, and she knew that she must be near the other end of the caves. Just then, a puff of wind blew out her candle and she was left standing in the dark. Annoyed, she took off her basket and rummaged around in it feeling for the package of matches. As soon as she pulled the package out of the basket, though, it jumped from her hand and fell somewhere on the black floor in front of her. Grumbling, she knelt down and tried to ignore the rocks under the heavy canvas knees of her trousers as she felt around for the package. She moved slowly forward as she swept her hands along the floor in front of her, searching carefully by feel. The matches proved to be elusive, and she was nearly crying by the time she finally felt them in front of her. How they had bounced all that way, she didn’t know. As she sat back on her heels to re-light her candle, she noticed that the darkness to the side of her was a little less black. It almost looked like night in that direction, instead of the absolute pitch-dark lightlessness of the caves. Then she saw some thing flit across it, looking a lot like a fire fly. Hurriedly she lit her candle once more, and, grabbing her basket, she walked quickly to the lighter patch of darkness.

Moments later, she stepped out of the caves into the night. It was a beautiful night, clear and full of stars with a bright moon overhead, and filled with the flitting of fireflies and other insects, including a huge green moth that came over to investigate Annalise’s candle flame.

She was on a steep hillside, with fir trees all around her; she could see down into a dark valley below. There were no lights, other than the fireflies, but the place wasn’t quiet. Annalise could hear all sort of insects, an owl, and then to her terror, something large crashing around in the woods. She backed slowly into the mouth of the cave again and blew out her candle. As she crouched there, several huge beasts with legs like tree trunks all covered with shaggy hair crashed by. They were enormous and had great curving white tusks in front and long appendages on their fronts. They looked a lot like the pictures of oliphants Annalise had seen in books, but oliphants weren’t so big and covered with hair. They were frightening beasts.

After the beasts had passed, Annalise relit her candle. That was when she realized that there was not enough of it left to see her safely back through the caves. She would have to go looking for something she could use as a torch – but that would need to wait until the sun was out in the morning. With a mental apology to her family for all the worry she must be causing them with her thoughtlessness, Annalise resigned herself to spending the night on the far side of the mountains. She was not going to sleep out there where huge beasts could step on her and never even notice, though. Annalise went a little deeper back into the cave and curled up under her blanket in a little niche in the wall.  She fell asleep listening to the strange noises of the valley beyond the mountains.

Meanwhile, her family had followed the tracks of Annalise’s pony cart back to where the rock slide and cave were. They were shocked to see the hole in the mountainside, but knew immediately that this was where Annalise had gone.

“I only hope she went willingly and wasn’t dragged off by who knows what,” said her father grimly. The young man who was courting her was moving the rocks, trying to make an opening large enough for a grown man to enter. Annalise had slipped through a much smaller entrance. As he struggled to move one of the larger rocks, aided by some of Annalise’s brothers, they all heard a loud rumbling from above them. The rocks that had fallen in the original slide were apparently just the first to fall. With a curse, the young men ran to safety as more of the mountainside came crashing down, burying the entrance to the cave behind tons of debris.

Annalise awoke slowly, feeling very warm and cozy. Her mattress seemed quite lumpy this morning, but she was wonderfully warm, even though the early spring air was quite chilly.  She stretched, opened her eyes, and was surprised to see a rocky ceiling above her until she remembered finding the cave entrance the day before. As she shifted slightly, a voice right beside her said, “Ah, I see you are awake now.” The warmth at her back moved, and a large grey wolf came into view.

Annalise crawled back into the very back of the niche in terror, clutching the blanket to her and screaming.
“Hush, child, you have no need to fear me.” The wolf was talking. Annalise stopped in mid-scream. If the wolf was talking, this must be a dream. Wolves didn’t talk. Annalise and the wolf stared at each other and then the wolf sat down and spoke again.

“You really are lucky you fell asleep in the cave, you know. If you had chosen to sleep outside, you wouldn’t have woken up as yourself. You would have been transformed into an animal while you slept, thanks to the sorcerer’s curse on the valley.”

“Huh?” Annalise thought this was a bit far-fetched, even for a dream. She reached down and pinched herself. It hurt. But she couldn’t be awake, could she?

“A curse,” repeated the wolf. “The same curse that turned me into a wolf, and all the other folks in the valley into other animals. Even though the sorcerer who created it is long dead, the curse lives on.” The wolf settled down and grinned a gape- mouthed lupine grin at Annalise. “I can see you don’t believe me and have no idea what I’m talking about.”
“This is just a dream. I’m still asleep. I have to be!” Annalise answered the wolf. “I thought there must be magic on the other side of the mountains, so I’m dreaming that there is!”

“Well, if you think this is a dream, you might as well hear the whole story,” the wolf laughed. “Listen well, girl child, while I tell you the story of the valley.”

“Once, long ago, how long I am not sure, for as an enchanted wolf, time flows differently, the valley was a happy and busy place. Magic abounded here, and the people of the valley traded with the people who lived on the other side of the mountains – magical wonders for natural wonders, things of many lands coming here in trade for the magical things we took for granted. It was a wonderful time, with plenty for all. There was a sorcerer, however, who had decided that he would wed the young daughter of the king of the valley. He thought she was beautiful, and wanted her hand more than anything else. The girl had other ideas, though. She was in love with another young man, and before the sorcerer could do anything to detain her, she ran off and wed her love in secret. The sorcerer found out and came after the young couple, but they disappeared for a while, out into the world beyond the mountains. Soon the young bride was with child, and wished to return to the valley to have her baby.  As soon as she set foot in the valley, the sorcerer knew that she was back and he was furious. He met her half-way to the palace and confronted her.

‘How dare you wed another when you knew I wanted you!’ he roared, red faced with rage.

‘How dare YOU demand that I wed you when I did not love you or want to marry you!’ she shouted back at him. ‘I wed the man I wanted to, and it was no business of yours. Now begone and let us pass, so that we might go and see my parents.’

The sorcerer’s lip curled. ‘Your parents are gone. I took care of them myself, with my magic, as soon as I heard you were gone. Since they would not stop you and make you mine, they had to be punished. Now you will be punished, too.’ With that the sorcerer threw a bottle on the ground, where it broke, a thick orange smoke billowing from it. He laughed cruelly, and said, ‘Your disloyalty to me has sealed the fate of the entire valley. You shall be as lonely as I am, for all eternity!’ With that, the sorcerer disappeared, leaving the young woman sobbing in the arms of her young husband.

As he held her, though, she could feel something happening. He was changing, shrinking. She pulled back just in time to see him turn into a snake. As she stared at him in horror, he turned and slithered away, frightened.

The curse had turned everyone in the valley into creatures of various sorts. The young woman had not changed, to her surprise, and as she wandered through the valley that morning, she saw that the palace guards had become mammoths, like huge hairy oliphants, the bards and minstrels had become brightly plumaged birds while the sturdy farmers and their families were changed into equally sturdy donkeys and ponies. All the people of the valley, except the young woman, had been turned into creatures. The young woman wandered all day, and as the sun began to set, found herself by the entrance to the caves that connected to the world beyond the mountains. She felt a new pain now, and knew that the time to deliver her child was upon her. Alone in the cave and alone in the valley, she bore her child, a girl, and wrapped her up well. She laid the baby beside her and then, exhausted, fell asleep there in the mouth of the cave. Sometime while she slept, she moved slightly and one of her feet slipped out of the cave and into the open air of the valley exposing it to the curse still hanging there. As she slept, she too changed. She awoke to hear her daughter crying with hunger and turned to nurse her.  To her horror, she could not care for her little daughter. She had become a wolf. Raising her head to the sky, she howled in sorrow, in fear, in loneliness. And in his tower, the sorcerer heard, and smiled.

The young woman turned wolf knew that the baby would not live if she did not find someone raise the child, so she did the only thing she could. She took the baby’s swaddling wraps in her jaws and carefully lifted the baby and carried her through the caves, back to the other side of the mountains.

She made directly for a small house near the mountains, because she remembered that the young woman of the house was also quite pregnant. Perhaps the woman would be willing to raise this child alongside her own. She laid her squalling daughter down on the doorstep and slipped into the trees to see what happened.

The door opened, and a woman looked out. Seeing the baby, she gasped and reached for it. The baby was taken inside, the door slammed shut, and the wolf went back into the cave. She returned several times over the next few days to make sure all was going well. Her daughter was being treated like a daughter of the house and was safe and well. The wolf realized that staying nearby would probably get her killed as a dangerous predator and came back through the cave to the valley.

Over the next few months, she watched the cave carefully. Traders came through the caves into the valley. As soon as they stopped to sleep, the curse took them and they became animals. A squirrel, a porcupine, a magnificent stag – all of the people transformed into some sort of creature. It bothered the young wolf-woman very much to see this happening, so she gathered all the magic she could find and all the magic she could use as a wolf, and went through the caves again. At the other side, she carefully wrought her magic, and the entrance to the cave disappeared. The rock wall became smooth, as if the cave had never been there. Sadly, the wolf-woman went back to the valley, all alone.”

Annalise looked at the wolf in front of her. “My great-great-great grandmother was a foundling,” she said, “and there were tales of a large wolf who was seen in the forest for a while about the time she was found.”

“Yes, I thought so. You have the look of my mother,” replied the wolf with a certain sadness.

“But, how could it be you! That was so long ago!” Annalise asked.

“It seems to be part of the magic spell,” the wolf said.  “If I am to be lonely forever, forever needs to last, well, forever.”

“But surely the sorcerer would have relented eventually,” Annalise said.

“He might have, if he were still alive. He died a few years after he cursed the valley, all alone, in a fall down the stairs to his tower. Some cats who lived there (they used to be his servants, before the curse) told me that they could hear him screaming for help for several days. Of course, there was no one to help him.”

Annalise shuddered. “Is there no hope, then, ever?”
“Well you might ask. There may be, but none of us in the valley can do anything about it. As we are all animals, we can’t get into his tower to see what may be done.”

“None of the creatures have the ability to get in?”

“In his fear of vengeance, the sorcerer made the tower so that no animal could enter it. It is magically shielded from us as surely as if it were made of seamless steel. We have tried, all of us, and we cannot enter it.” The wolf shook her head, a very human gesture. “I think that perhaps there is a spell to break the curse therein, for the sorcerer was growing quite lonely in his last years. Still, I do not know.”

Annalise sat silently for a while. “It has been so very long. My world has begun to think that the land here never existed. I do find that strange, since there was once trade between the lands.”

The wolf replied, “No, for not all traveled here. The routes in were hidden to all but a few traders, lest we be overrun with people wishing to play with the magic, which is always a dangerous thing. It may be a side effect of the curse, as well, seeping out into the world beyond.”

Annalise looked at her, trying to get her head around the idea that this wolf had been a woman who was her ancestor. Finally, she spoke, “How far off is the tower?  Do you think I could get into it?”

“Child, the tower is near, but I do not know what sorts of traps the sorcerer may have laid in it. It may not be safe, and I do not wish to endanger you.”
“If the tower is near, then I will go and try. The sorcerer was defending himself against animals, not other humans. I’m willing to bet that I can do it.”

“You know you may be gambling with your life, don’t you?”
“Yes, I do. But I want to do it. If you won’t show me the way to the tower, then I’ll just go exploring until I find it myself,” Annalise added.

“Then let us waste no more time. I will show you the way. When you have seen it, you may wish to turn back. Then I will guide you through the caves to your home and seal the entrance shut once more, so that no one else can be harmed.”

They set off down the hillside, with the wolf telling her about the land as they went. Annalise told her some of the stories she had heard, and the wolf laughed at a few of them. Others she confirmed as being true. She pointed out magical creatures to Annalise as they went, too, some of which Annalise had never even heard of. Finally, the wolf said, “It is strange to think of my home as being nothing more than a tale in the world beyond. It is even stranger to think that so much time has passed. But there, look, the tower is just beyond that rise. You can see the top of it now.”
The tower was indeed just ahead, and Annalise began to feel quite nervous. At the top of the rise, she paused to look around her. While they had been walking and talking, all sorts of animals had joined them. Others had already gathered in the clearing around the tower. The great mammoths, colorful birds, squirrels, badgers, porcupines and deer, the cats and dogs, donkeys and ponies, birds and beasts of every kind. They were all there, waiting and hoping. How had they known, Annalise wondered. It must have been the magic here. The wolf beside her sat down with a great sigh and looked up at Annalise wordlessly. Annalise just looked back, and then nodded.

Annalise pushed through the throngs of animals to the base of the tower. Many murmured words of encouragement as she passed. At the head of the group was a large snake. Annalise had a feeling she knew who this was, and this was confirmed when the wolf came and sat down beside it.

None of the animals could come within ten feet of the tower, so she walked the last few steps alone. There was complete silence in the clearing as she approached the door.

Annalise put her hand on the doorknob and turned it. It turned and clicked with a rusty, dirty, grating sound. She pushed on the door and it move slightly. She tried again and put her shoulder into it. The door was stiff and warped with age, but finally it gave and she stumbled into the musty darkness inside. As daylight streamed through the door for the first time in two hundred years, the first thing that Annalise saw was the skeleton of the sorcerer at the bottom of the stairs. It was clear that both legs were badly broken. Annalise shuddered and stepped over it as quickly as she could. It was sad, but he had chosen his own fate. She mounted the stone stairs slowly, checking for surprises as she went.

“The workroom will be at the top!” The wolf called out one last instruction as Annalise slowly climbed the stairs. The first level and the second level were simply living quarters and Annalise moved quickly through these. The next level seemed to have been just a storeroom, full of dusty trunks and broken furniture. The top level was next. Annalise saw a heavy wooden door on the landing at the top of the stairs. There was no key hole, no lock, just a doorknob. Annalise slowly reached out to grasp it. Nothing happened, so she turned the knob carefully. This door had been protected from the elements, and opened with only a small creak.

The workroom was covered in dust – fortunately, the sorcerer had been a tidy sort of fellow, and so the dust was the worst of the mess. Annalise saw shelves of books and scrolls, more shelves of bottles and small boxes all carefully labeled, and dusty but otherwise clean glassware and strange apparatus on the wooden worktables. She went over to the windows and unlatched them, pushing them open to let in the clean spring breeze. A fresh gust of it burst through the windows and rushed through the room, blowing away much of the dust and leaving Annalise sneezing violently. It seemed that the land itself was trying to help lift the curse.

Annalise wandered around the room for a short while, getting an idea of what was there and where things were stored. Finally, she came upon a locked cabinet on the far wall. If she were the sorcerer, this was where she would keep something like the counter spell for the curse. Unfortunately, this cabinet was locked. The keyhole was a tiny thing, so the key could be hidden almost anywhere. She remembered that the skeleton had had a small pouch, nearly rotted through, strapped around its waist. Although she was not happy with the idea, she knew she needed to check this for the key.

Slowly, she made her way back down the stairs – she didn’t want to end up like the sorcerer had, broken and helpless at the bottom. When she got there, she carefully opened the little pouch, which fell apart in her hands. In it were a few coins, a miniature painting on a locket, and a tiny key. She put the other items in her pocket to examine later, and hurried back upstairs with the key.

The key fit into the lock perfectly, and the cabinet opened with a snick. The doors creaked open, and displayed there were row upon row of bottles, all carefully labeled in a faded, spidery script.  Annalise sighed with resignation. This was going to take a while.

She leaned out of the window to let the waiting animals know what was going on, and then took a chair over to the cabinet.

Several hours later, she had found spells for growing hair on a bald spot, making flowers appear in thin air, speaking to someone miles away, changing the colors of one’s clothing, and cleaning one’s clothing while still wearing it. There were dozens of others, mostly frivolous, some truly useful. She was tempted to try the one for cleaning clothing, because she was filthy from her trip through the caves the day before.

 The light was beginning to grow dim as she took the last bottles from the cabinet. She was very discouraged – perhaps there wasn’t a counter spell, after all. The last bottle came out – it was a spell for untangling your horse’s mane – and Annalise set it on the table beside her with tears in her eyes. She had failed.

She turned to leave the room, to go and break it to the animals that there was no hope for them, when something caught her eye. There was a mirror hanging on the wall which did not sit tight against the wall. It appeared to be raised, as if something were under it. Annalise reached out to take the edge and as soon as she touched the mirror, something odd happened. The image of herself swirled and she saw herself as a young child, as a daughter and sister. She saw, flashing past, major events in her life, things she wished she had never done and things she still laughed over. Tears came to her eyes, and she laughed at the same time. She saw the woman she had become and how she affected those around her. She even saw her beloved desperately moving rocks at the entrance to the caves, and her conscience pricked her. Finally she heard a voice saying, “Face yourself. Do you accept what you find here?”
Annalise held firmly onto the edge of the mirror, and answered, “Yes, I do. This is me, and I accept who I am.”
The mirror’s surface stopped swirling and disappeared. Where it had been was a single bottle. She reached in and took it. It was labeled, simply, “Counter Spell.”
Slowly, Annalise descended to the bottom once more. As she exited the door, the sun began to set on the horizon. She looked at the wolf, and the wolf told her, “Just open the bottle. If it works, we’ll know.”
Annalise took a deep breath and pulled the stopper from the bottle. A cloud of blue smoke rushed forth, and expanded to cover everything. Annalise could see nothing for a few seconds, and then the smoke cleared. Before her stood not a crowd of animals, but a crowd of humans, all smiling and staring at her in wonder. A great roar went up from the crowd, a roar of joy. People began laughing and crying and hugging one another. Annalise looked at the head of the crowd and saw a young woman who looked very like herself, and like the miniature she had in her pocket. Beside her was a young man who reminded her slightly of her father, which made since, since he was her great-great-great grandfather. They were smiling, with tears in their eyes, holding hands as if they would never let one another go again. As one, they turned to Annalise. “There is no way we can ever thank you enough,” they said. “You have given us back our lives.”

As the stars came out in the sky above them, a joyful escort led Annalise back to the caves. “What I don’t understand,” said Annalise, “is why the sorcerer would have stored the counter spell in such a way. He would have had to face himself to retrieve it, and that wouldn’t have been an easy thing to do”

“Perhaps that is the reason. He didn’t wish to use it, so he made it as hard as possible to reach it. He didn’t want to use it the first time he got lonely,” suggested the lovely young woman who was her ancestor.

“He was lonely, though. I found this in his belt pouch,” said Annalise, handing over the miniature and the coins.

“Yes, the picture is me, and the coins are those from lands we used to trade with,” came the reply.

“And will trade with once more!” someone else added.

When they reached the caves, someone just waved their arms and said a word, and lanterns in the walls lit up. “This is much better than a candle stub!” said Annalise.

The group walked through the caves, pointing out wonderful rock formations and strange sights as they went. When they came to the end, they could hear people digging on the far side of the wall.

Several of the people did a few mysterious things and suddenly the wall had a large opening in it. The folks digging on the other side were standing there in astonishment.

Annalise flew into their arms and hugging everyone she could reach, said, “Boy, do we have a tale to tell you!”

Categories: Wolf Dreams
Tagged: , , , ,